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- THE WEEK, Page 20NATIONNot Bad for Government Work
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- It took two centuries, but voter anger may curb Congress's pay
- hikes
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- If dead presidents could smile in their graves, James Madison
- would be beaming. Nearly 203 years after the fourth President
- proposed a constitutional amendment to prevent Congress from
- giving itself a midterm pay raise, a requisite 38 states have
- agreed that there is "a seeming indecorum," as Madison
- contended, in the power to increase one's own salary. Last week
- four states, prompted by public outrage over the Senate's 1991
- midnight pay hike and other Capitol Hill scandals, ratified the
- amendment, which Madison had sought as part of what became the
- original Bill of Rights. While the provision does not bar pay
- raises outright, it would delay their execution until after the
- next congressional election, thus making lawmakers more
- accountable to voters.
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- But whether this proposal, first ratified by Maryland in
- 1789, will finally become the 27th Amendment is still uncertain.
- Some experts question whether it is still valid after more than
- two centuries. In an odd twist, Congress itself may have to
- determine its validity. "We all know that the wheels of
- government often turn slowly," observes Republican State Senator
- Joseph Bubba, who sponsored the amendment in New Jersey. "But
- two centuries is too long to wait, even by government
- standards."
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